Daily Record

Car-ash goes motor trade

Biggest slump in output for 10 years

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UK car plants suffered their worst November for a decade.

The number of cars rolling off the production line crashed by nearly a fifth, according to the Society of Motor Manufactur­ers and Traders.

The trade body blamed weak demand, both from UK buyers and those abroad, plus the impact of new regulation­s and model changes.

The slump prompted fresh warnings about the impact of a no-deal Brexit on the UK’s automotive trade.

A total of 129,030 cars were made in the UK last month, including Jaguar Land Rover’s plants and Nissan’s Sunderland factory.

The 19.6 per cent drop was the worst for any November since 2008, at the start of the financial crisis. The number of cars destined for UK buyers fell 1.9 per cent.

That was eclipsed by a 22.8 per cent plunge in exports, another 10-year low. In the year to date, more than 1.4million cars have been built in the UK overall, a 8.2 per cent year-on-year decline.

Mike Hawes, SMMT chief executive, called last month’s drop “very concerning”. He added: “With fewer than 100 days until the UK leaves the EU, the automotive industry needs certainty and a no-deal Brexit must be ruled out.

“Thousands of jobs in British car factories and supply chains depend on free and frictionle­ss trade with the EU – if the country falls off a cliff edge, the consequenc­es would be devastatin­g.”

It follows reports that Jaguar Land Rover are preparing to announce up to 5000 job losses in the new year as part of a £2.5billion cost-cutting plan.

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